This change adds the --direct-io flag to the mount. This means the
page cache is completely bypassed for reads and writes. No read-ahead
takes place. Shared mmap is disabled.
This is useful to accurately read files which may change length
frequently on the source.
Before this change, the VFS layer did not properly handle unicode normalization,
which caused problems particularly for users of macOS. While attempts were made
to handle it with various `-o modules=iconv` combinations, this was an imperfect
solution, as no one combination allowed both NFC and NFD content to
simultaneously be both visible and editable via Finder.
After this change, the VFS supports `--no-unicode-normalization` (default `false`)
via the existing `--vfs-case-insensitive` logic, which is extended to apply to both
case insensitivity and unicode normalization form.
This change also adds an additional flag, `--vfs-block-norm-dupes`, to address a
probably rare but potentially possible scenario where a directory contains
multiple duplicate filenames after applying case and unicode normalization
settings. In such a scenario, this flag (disabled by default) hides the
duplicates. This comes with a performance tradeoff, as rclone will have to scan
the entire directory for duplicates when listing a directory. For this reason,
it is recommended to leave this disabled if not needed. However, macOS users may
wish to consider using it, as otherwise, if a remote directory contains both NFC
and NFD versions of the same filename, an odd situation will occur: both
versions of the file will be visible in the mount, and both will appear to be
editable, however, editing either version will actually result in only the NFD
version getting edited under the hood. `--vfs-block-norm-dupes` prevents this
confusion by detecting this scenario, hiding the duplicates, and logging an
error, similar to how this is handled in `rclone sync`.
The upstream library rclone uses for rclone mount no longer supports
freebsd. Not only is it broken, but it no longer compiles.
This patch disables rclone mount for freebsd.
However all is not lost for freebsd users - compiling rclone with the
`cmount` tag, so `go install -tags cmount` will install a working
`rclone mount` command which uses cgofuse and the libfuse C library
directly.
Note that the binaries from rclone.org will not have mount support as
we don't have a freebsd build machine in CI and it is very hard to
cross compile cmount.
See: https://github.com/bazil/fuse/issues/280Fixes#5843
Summary:
In cases where cmount is not available in macOS, we alias nfsmount to mount command and transparently start the NFS server and mount it to the target dir.
The NFS server is started on localhost on a random port so it is reasonably secure.
Test Plan:
```
go run rclone.go mount --http-url https://beta.rclone.org :http: nfs-test
```
Added mount tests:
```
go test ./cmd/nfsmount
```
Since version 3 of fuse libfuse no longer does anything when given the
nonempty option and it's default is to allow mounting over non empty
directories like normal mount does.
Some versions of libfuse give an error when using `--allow-non-empty`
which is annoying for the user.
We now do this check ourselves so we no longer need to pass the option
to libfuse.
Fixes#3562
Before this fix, we told cgofuse/WinFSP that the backend was case
insensitive but didn't implement the Getpath backend function to
return the normalised case of a file.
Resently cgofuse started implementing case insensitive files properly
but since we hadn't implemented Getpath, the file names were taking
the default of all in UPPER CASE.
This patch implements Getpath for cgofuse which fixes the case
problems.
This problem came to light when we upgraded cgofuse and WinFSP (to
1.12) which had the code to implement Getpath.
Fixes#6682
Before this change, the device name was always the remote:path rclone
was configured with. However this can contain sensitive information
and it appears in the `mount` output, so `--devname` allows the user
to configure it.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/rclone-mount-blomp-problem/29151/11
This is possible now that we no longer support go1.12 and brings
rclone into line with standard practices in the Go world.
This also removes errors.New and errors.Errorf from lib/errors and
prefers the stdlib errors package over lib/errors.
Before this patch selfupdate detected ANY build with cmount tag as a build
having libFUSE capabilities. However, only dynamic builds really have it.
The official linux builds are static and have the cmount tag as of the time
of this writing. This results in inability to update official linux binaries.
This patch fixes that. The build can be fixed independently.
This adds
-o modules=iconv,from_code=UTF-8,to_code=UTF-8-MAC
To the mount options if it isn't already present which fixes mounting
issues on macOS with accented characters in the finder.
Add --network-mode option to activate mounting as network drive without having to set volume prefix.
Add support for automatic drive letter assignment (not specific to network drive mounting).
Allow full network share unc path in --volname, which will also implicitely activate network drive mounting.
Allow full network share unc path as mountpoint, which will also implicitely activate network drive mounting, and the specified path will be used as volume prefix and the remote will be mounted on an automatically assigned drive letter instead.
Before this change cgofuse and libatexit would race to see who could
unmount the file system with unpredicatable results. On Linux it could
report an error or not, depending.
This change checks to see if umount is beng called from a signal and
if so leaves the unmounting to cgofuse/libfuse.
See #4804
Before this change if the user supplied `-o uid=XXX` then rclone would
write `-o uid=-1 -o uid=XXX` so duplicating the uid value.
After this change rclone doesn't write the default `-1` version.
This fix affects `uid` and `gid`.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/issue-with-rclone-mount-and-resilio-sync/14730/27
Before this change when reading directories we would use the directory
handle and the Readdir(-1) call on the directory handle. This worked
fine for the first read, but if the directory was read again on the
same handle Readdir(-1) returns nothing (as per its design).
It turns out that macOS leaves the directory handle open and just
re-reads the data from it, so this problem causes directories to start
out full then subsequently appear empty.
macOS/OSXFUSE is passing an offset of 0 to the Readdir call telling
rclone to seek in the directory, but we've told FUSE that we can't
seek by always returning ofst=0 in the fill function.
This fix works around the problem by reading the directory from the
path each time, ignoring the actual handle. This should be no less
efficient.
We will return an ESPIPE if offset is ever non 0.
There are possible corner cases reading deleted directories which this
ignores.